A radio frequency (RF) receiver is provided. The RF receiver is configured to simultaneously receive at least two radio frequency bands with a single receiver path. The RF receiver comprises a single local oscillator (lo), and the RF receiver is configured to filter a received signal using a complex filter having a variable center frequency. In accordance with another aspect, many RF receivers are combined to form an aggregate carrier receiver.
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1. A radio frequency (RF) receiver, comprising:
a pair of first mixers;
a first local oscillator (lo) coupled to the pair of first mixers;
a second mixer for intermediate frequency (IF) down-conversion in the analog domain;
a complex filter having a variable center frequency coupled between the pair of first mixers and the second mixer, wherein the RF receiver is configured to:
simultaneously receive a carrier aggregation signal having at least two radio frequency bands with a single receiver path; and
filter, using the complex filter, a received signal output by the pair of first mixers based on the carrier aggregation signal, and
wherein the second mixer is a finite impulse response (FIR) mixer implemented using parallel mixers, and the FIR mixer is configured to:
receive different weighted versions of an input signal from the complex filter; and
mix the different weighted versions of the input signal with different delayed versions of a lo signal generated by a second lo to form an output signal.
9. A carrier aggregation receiver, comprising:
at least two radio frequency (RF) receivers, wherein each of the at least two RF receivers comprises:
a pair of first mixers,
a first local oscillator (lo) coupled to the pair of first mixers;
a second mixer for intermediate frequency (IF) down-conversion in the analog domain; and
a complex filter having a variable center frequency coupled between the pair of first mixers and the second mixer, and the each of the at least two RF receivers is configured to:
simultaneously receive a carrier aggregation signal having at least two radio frequency bands with a single receiver path; and
filter, using the complex filter, a received signal output by the pair of first mixers based on the carrier aggregation signal, and
wherein the second mixer is a finite impulse response (FIR) mixer implemented using Parallel mixers, and the FIR mixer is configured to:
receive different weighted versions of an input signal from the complex filter; and
mix the different weighted versions of the input signal with different delayed versions of a lo signal generated by a second lo to form an output signal.
2. The RF receiver according to
3. The RF receiver according to
4. The RF receiver according to
5. The RF receiver according to
6. The RF receiver according to
7. The RF receiver according to
8. The RF receiver according to
10. The carrier aggregation receiver according to
11. The carrier aggregation receiver according to
12. The carrier aggregation receiver according to
13. The carrier aggregation receiver according to
perform Analogue to Digital conversion (ADC) for the each of the at least two RF receivers using a same ADC clock.
14. The carrier aggregation receiver according to
15. The carrier aggregation receiver according to
16. The carrier aggregation receiver according to
17. The carrier aggregation receiver according to
18. The carrier aggregation receiver according to
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This application is a continuation of International Application No. PCT/EP2018/085310, filed on Dec. 17, 2018, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The application relates to a radio frequency receiver and in particular to a radio frequency receiver suitable for aggregation of carriers.
Today's radio frequency (RF) receivers for the 4G telecommunication standard and also future 5G telecommunication standard receivers use extensive amount of so-called carrier aggregation. Carrier aggregation provides for transmission of data over multiple carriers simultaneously. Carrier aggregation is typically employed when there are not enough continuous frequency bands available to meet the bandwidth requirements for very high data rates. The expanded use of carrier aggregation will require increasing amounts of parallel receivers, front-end modules, and antennas. There are physical limits for adding more antennas to mobile devices and front-end module cost will also restrict the amount for parallel receiver chains.
In order to meet the increasing number of inter-band non-contiguous earlier aggregation cases, the RF integrated Circuit (IC) should preferably receive simultaneously more than one frequency band with a single receiver path if the receiver bandwidth and dynamic range is large enough. However, reaching high dynamic range simultaneously with wide bandwidth requires both a high current consumption and a large silicon area. Therefore, it is typically more feasible to provide a receiver circuit with several connected parallel receiver paths to one RF input port in the RF IC that only share an RF input buffer stage.
When two separate receivers are receiving frequency bands close to each other, the generated Local Oscillator (LO)-frequencies of the two down-conversion mixers are also close to each other. This makes the two voltage-controlled oscillators (VCOs), or digitally controlled oscillators (DCOs), to disturb each other. Alternative one of the oscillators is forced to operate at double or even higher frequency thus complicating frequency synthesizer and LO-divider implementation.
As an alternative, the two receiver paths could share the same LO-frequency (and naturally only one frequency synthesizer) that is haft-way between the two desired frequency bands using low-IF architecture as depicted in
Complex filters can be implemented from low-pass filters by cross feeding filter integrator feedback signals between I- and Q-branches. Then a direct conversion receiver (i.e. zero-intermediate frequency IF) can be transformed into a complex filter having a center frequency either on a positive intermediate frequency +fIF or a negative intermediate frequency −fIF. The analog-digital converters in low-IF receivers are usually implemented as complex ΔΣ Analogue to Digital conversions (ADCs) so that the down-conversion from IF frequency to DC is implemented in digital domain.
The low-IF architecture with complex baseband filter works energy effectively for IF frequencies in the range of few tens of megahertz. With higher IF frequencies it becomes increasingly difficult to implement the complex frequency response without strongly increasing variation in the frequency response over process, supply voltage and temperature. Similarly, because of the diminishing oversampling ratio, the complex ΔΣ Analogue to Digital conversions (ADCs) becomes finally impossible to implement.
In order to cover a higher IF frequency range with the same receiver, the IF down-conversion should be shifted from digital to analogue domain in front of the ADC as depicted in
Hence, there is a need for an improved RF receiver and in particular an improved RF receiver that can provide carrier aggregation reception.
It is an object of the present application to provide an improved an improved RF receiver and also to provide an improved carrier aggregation receiver.
These objects and or other objects are obtained by the RF receiver and the carrier aggregation receiver as set out in the appended claims.
In accordance with a first aspect of the application, Radio Frequency (RF) receiver is provided. The RF receiver is configured to simultaneously receive at least two radio frequency bands with a single receiver path. The RF receiver comprises a single local oscillator (LO) and the RF receiver is configured to filter a received signal using a complex filter having a variable center frequency, Hereby an efficient RF receiver for receiving multiple carriers can be implemented.
In accordance with a first implementation of the first aspect, the center frequency of the complex filter is a programmable center frequency. Hereby the center frequency can easily be adapted to different center frequencies.
In accordance with a second implementation of the first aspect, the center frequency of the complex filter is a center frequency equal to an intermediate frequency (IF) of the RF receiver. Hereby the receiver can efficiently filter relevant frequencies.
In accordance with a third implementation of the first aspect, the center frequency is either a positive or a negative intermediate frequency (if) of the RF receiver. Hereby both positive and negative intermediate frequencies can be filtered.
In accordance with a fourth implementation of the first aspect, the complex filter comprises a grounded RC-circuit connected to a voltage buffer and the complex filter further comprises an offset capacitor configured to offset the center frequency of the RC-circuit. Hereby an efficient implementation of the complex filter can be Obtained.
In accordance with a fifth implementation of the first aspect, the RF receiver is configured to perform intermediate frequency (IF) down-conversion using a Finite Impulse Response (FIR) mixer. Hereby the receiver can be efficiently implemented with a downconverter having good harmonic rejection capabilities.
In accordance with a sixth implementation of the first aspect, the FIR mixer comprises at least two delayed paths. In particular the FIR mixer can comprise 2-4 delayed paths. Hereby the harmonic rejection can be improved.
In accordance with a sixth implementation of the first aspect, the FIR mixer is configured to weigh signals on paths of the FIR mixer. Hereby a more efficient receiver with better harmonic rejection can be implemented.
In accordance with a second aspect of the application, carrier aggregation receiver comprising at least two RF receivers according to the above is provided Hereby an efficient receiver structure that can receive many aggregated carriers can be obtained.
In accordance with a first implementation of the second aspect, the at least two RF receivers are configured to operate with different signs of the intermediate frequency. IF, frequency. Hereby both positive and negative IF frequencies can be filtered using the same receiver structure.
In accordance with a second implementation of the second aspect, the at least two RF receivers are configured to operate with different IF frequencies. Hereby different IF frequencies can be filtered in the same receiver structure.
In accordance with a third implementation of the second aspect, each of said at least two RF receivers is configured to operate using the same LO. Hereby an efficient receiver implementation can be achieved that is easy to synchronize.
In accordance with a fourth implementation of the second aspect, the carrier aggregation receiver is configured to perform Analogue to Digital conversion (ADC) for each of said at least two RF receivers using the same ADC clock. Hereby an efficient receiver implementation can be achieved that is easy to synchronize.
In accordance with a fourth implementation of the second aspect, the FIR mixers for each of said at least two RF receiver are configured to use the same ADC clock. Hereby an efficient receiver implementation can be achieved that is easy to synchronize.
The application will now be described in more detail, by way of example, and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The application will now be described in detail hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which certain embodiments of the application are shown. The application may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided by way of example so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the application to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout the description.
To improve the filtering of for example harmonics of a Local Oscillator (LO) signal, an electrical circuit implementing a so-called FIR-mixer can be used. A FIR-mixer is described in co-pending patent application no. PCT/EP2018/059561. The electrical circuit forming the FIR-mixer can be formed by a FIR filter configured to filter the LO signal itself. This is implemented using parallel mixers added with delayed version(s) of the original LO, effectively creating a Finite Impulse Response (FIR) filter for the LO waveform. The mixers can be weighted to obtain various filter responses, and the electrical circuit as described herein can have various applications in addition to the harmonic rejection example used herein. The FIR-mixer is described below with reference to
In
The structure of the electrical circuit 10 implementing a FIR-mixer, can be seen as a FIR filter for the oscillator signal where the delayed version(s) of the local oscillator signal is/are mixed with the input signal to form an output signal. The delayed versions of the LO signal can be mixed with weighted versions of the input signal. For this purpose, weights can be provided at the respective paths between the input terminal and the different mixers. For example, in the embodiment shown in
In such a FIR filter configuration, the filter can be configured to weigh an un-delayed version of the local oscillator signal with a first weighted version of the input signal and a first delayed version of the local oscillator signal with a second weighted version of the input signal. For example, in the embodiment of
b0=1, b1=√{square root over (2)}, b2=1
Such a selection of weights 31, 32, and 33 can advantageously be used to filter out at east the 3rd and 5th harmonics of the local oscillator signal.
As is implied by
In order to obtain harmonic rejection for the 3rd and 5th harmonics, three mixers can be used for
b0=1, b1=√{square root over (2)}, b2=1
a filtering response 62 shown in
An example application when using an electrical circuit as described above can be in a direct down-conversion receiver. Such a receiver 40 is shown in
The electrical circuits 10 can have three mixers each to obtain harmonic rejection for the 3rd and 5th harmonic of the LO signal. The relative weighting can then be set as above.
In
Thus, a receiver 40, in particular a direct down-conversion receiver can be provided that comprises and makes beneficial use of the electrical circuit 10 outlined in
In accordance with one embodiment, the sampling rate fs is 8 times the target LO frequency f_(LO,target). Such a scenario is shown in
When constructing a receiver covering a higher IF frequency range with the same, single, receiver, the complex filter should be implemented with more wideband filtering techniques than the widely used operational amplifier based active-RC filters. Often transconductance-C filters are used in applications with relaxed linearity requirements. In order to overcome the linearity issue, a continuous-time complex IF-resonator is implemented by using relatively linear voltage and current buffers.
Alternatively, different discrete-time switched-capacitor techniques are used to realize IF-filters resulting in relatively large current consumption caused by high frequency switch drivers and spur tones caused by aliasing and harmonic mixing.
In order to reach optimum dynamic range and bandwidth compromise for the ADC, the down-conversion from IF is performed before the ADC in analogue domain. Since the complex IF-filter has rather limited selectivity, the IF downconverter should have good harmonic rejection capabilities. This can for example be implemented using a FIR-mixer as described above that is operating from the ADC clock.
A FIR-mixer with 3 weights can provide harmonic rejection up to the 5th harmonic of the IF-frequency that is fCLK/8. With just a relatively small added complexity, a FIR-mixer with two taps more can be implemented that can reject IF harmonics up to the 9th harmonic of the IF-frequency of fCLK/8. Further combination details with the example of a 2 GHz ADC clock frequency are given in Table 1 below. Therefore, with a FIR-mixer with 3, 4 or 5 adjustable weights and one optional clock divider it is possible to support a flexible set of IF-frequencies ranging from 83 MHz to 250 MHz with a 2 GHz ADC clock.
Highest
IF
rejected
1st mixed
CLK
frequency
harmonic
harmonic
div
FIR mixing weights
[MHz]
[MHz]
[MHz]
1
sin(45°), sin(90°), sin(135°)
250.00
1250
1750.00
1
sin(36°), sin(72°), sin(108°),
200.00
1400
1800.00
sin(144°)
1
sin(30°), sin(60°), sin(90°),
166.67
1500
1833.33
sin(120°), sin(150°)
2
sin(45°), sin(90°), sin(135°)
125.00
625
875.00
2
sin(36°), sin(72°), sin(108°),
100.00
700
900.00
sin(144°)
2
sin(30°), sin(60°), sin(90°),
83.33
750
916.67
sin(120°), sin(150°)
In
Since the FIR-mixer 10 can effectively reject IF-frequency harmonics, the channel filtering can be split between a low-order complex IF bandpass filter 50 and a high order baseband lowpass filter 60 thus further enhancing the area and power efficiency of an IC circuit. Even if the complex IF filter 50 improves the image and blocker rejection just by 6 dB it may result in significant power and area savings in the baseband filter and ADC. If the baseband noise floor is analogue noise limited, 6 dB lower noise would need four times lower impedance level for critical parts if resistor noise dominates or four times larger operation amplifier (OA) input stages if the flicker noise dominates. Hereby a receiver 100 configured to simultaneously receive at least two radio frequency bands with a single receiver path can be implemented The RF receiver 100 comprises a single local oscillator (LO) and the RF receiver is configured to filter a received signal using the complex filter 50 which can have a variable center frequency as is described below.
The complex filter 50 can be implemented using current buffers AI and voltage buffers AV as depicted in
The complex transimpedance of the filter stage is for both configurations of
with a center frequency of
The peak transimpedance is also increased. Without the voltage buffered capacitors C2, the Direct Current DC transimpedance would equal R1 but with voltage buffered cross Connections becomes:
When C2=2C1 the peak transimpedance becomes R1√{square root over (5)} leading to approximately 7 dB more gain than without the voltage buffered capacitors. Similarly, this capacitor ratio results in over 10 dB of IF image rejection thus relaxing the image rejection requirements of the IF down-conversion mixer. In accordance with some implementations the center frequency is programmable to allow for easy change of the center frequency. For example, the offset capacitor can be programmable to offset the center frequency of the RC-circuit. The center frequency can in particular be set to a center frequency equal to an intermediate frequency (IF) of the RF receiver.
In
There are several well-known techniques to improve both the current and voltage buffer port impedances and linearity such as cascading techniques, super source-followers etc. Similarly, additional bias structures may be used to adjust input and output DC voltage levels in order to optimize voltage swings in each circuit node thus maximizing dynamic range. The single-ended amplifiers are also paired to pseudodifferential I- and Q-branch amplifiers possibly with additional common-mode voltage rejection structures.
By using current buffers and voltage buffers to implement the complex filter 50, it is possible to implement higher frequency filters with lower power consumption than with operational amplifiers. Still a good linearity performance is achieved because of the possibility to implement the current buffers and voltage buffer linearly with low complexity structures.
For added flexibility, the voltage buffers can in accordance with some implementations be disabled and shorted with a bypass switch resulting in lower filter center frequency and lower peak gain. The full complex filter both with current and voltage buffers has a center frequency of 250 MHz and a peak transimpedance gain of approximately 49 dBΩ, (˜282Ω) while without voltage buffering the filter center frequency drops to 100 MHz and the peak gain below 47 dBΩ. So, an optional bypassing of the voltage buffers is useful in expanding the tuning range of the center frequency and the gain of the complex IF filter. Naturally, disabling the voltage buffers when possible also saves power.
By using multiple (at least two) receivers 100 as described above a full carrier aggregation receiver can be implemented.
When two (or more) such receivers are sharing the RF inputs and LO1 frequency source, even more frequency combinations are possible. The receivers can independently filter different IF-frequencies either on positive or negative frequencies. It is also possible to implement three parallel receiver paths sharing the same RF input and LO1 frequency source. wherein said at least two RF receivers are configured to operate with different signs of the intermediate frequency (IF). Also, such a carrier aggregation receiver can be configured to perform Analogue to Digital conversion (ADC) for each RF receivers using the same ADC clock. The FIR mixers for each RF receiver can also be configured to use the same ADC clock.
Such a carrier aggregation receiver architecture can provide a linear and simple complex IF filter based on current and voltage buffers capable of IF frequencies in the megahertz range and FIR-mixer that can support different IF frequencies with varying harmonic reject capabilities.
Further, the variable 3, 4, or 5-tap configuration for the FIR-mixer is advantageous for the receiver architecture because it can provide a useful set of IF downmixing frequencies supporting a wide range of carrier aggregation use cases as well as provides additional frequency planning options for spur avoidance.
Koli, Kimmo, Englund, Mikko John
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